kettal
Banned
I'd love to know how you arrived at this conclusion.Subway could be built faster than the LRT
I'd love to know how you arrived at this conclusion.Subway could be built faster than the LRT
They're already building a majority of the subway in the current plan. If they just have to build it an extra 3 km and not have to do the rest of the building, certainly they'll be able to save money and time.I'd love to know how you arrived at this conclusion.
They're already building a majority of the subway in the current plan. If they just have to build it an extra 3 km and not have to do the rest of the building, certainly they'll be able to save money and time.
Ok, now that just makes you sound like a "LRT groupie." It's true that grade separated LRT is just as good as subway in terms of speed. And if Eglinton was totally grade separated but still LRT, I wouldn't have a problem with that. Even if it was totally grade separated west of Don Mills, I'd be (reasonably) happy even though it'd be LRT.Grade separated LRT goes the same speed as a subway....
...If the budget supports grade separation for an entire route or capacity concerns force it then build subway.
They probably WOULD be glad. But answer the question ... if there was no savings in time (actually a loss of time, as the subway trains wouldn't be as frequent, and lost time doing a transfer), no capacity issues, and money that could be saved in the short-term ... what is the benfit.Building a partial subway wouldn't be "imposing" a transfer at all. Sure, there might be a transfer while the LRT wouldn't have any, but people wouldn't be unhappy about it. They'd probably be quite glad that they have a subway to transfer to.
Okay ... what is the long-term benefit?This is all about short term benefits vs. long term gain. Obviously, the LRT would have more short term benefits than subway.
I'm not sure what the benefit here is ... the only benefit is that the tunnelled section would be a bit longer? Whose to say that the LRT terminus wouldn't still be at Brentcliffe and Keele ... it's not like there's the $700-million extra sitting around ...That's not to say that a subway wouldn't have any short term benefits; it'd have plenty, and it'd have advantages over LRT if it went from Jane to Don Mills (the LRT would only be going to Keele and Laird, which means the RT part of Eglinton wouldn't be connecting and supplementing the planned LRTs.)
Why? I'd think the lack of a complex signalling system, along with smaller stations, etc., would go the LRT being faster to build.Subway could be built faster than the LRT
What is "true RT coverage"? If the LRT and subway have the same speeds, and the LRT runs more frequently, how is it not just as RT as the subway?... and it'd extend true RT coverage further than LRT.
But that would only happen if the loading exceeds 10,000 peope per hour per direction or so west of Keele or east of Brentcliffe. Given that they estimate the loading to be less than 5,400 peope per hour per direction at the busiest point on the line, in 2031; why would the suddenly have 10,000 people? Particularly as the busiest point in the line is likely close to Yonge, where the capacity of the LRT is closer to 15,000 with the grade separation.But the real obvious benefits come when the subway gets extended again, which could easily be 5 years after it's first finished.
The entire line is scheduled to be completed in 2018. The demand estimates for 2031 are no where near subway. What are these "obvious, obvious" demands before 2028?An extension to Martingrove or Pearson in the west would have obvious, obvious benefits over a LRT that'd get finished less than 10 years earlier.
Ok, now that just makes you sound like a "LRT groupie." It's true that grade separated LRT is just as good as subway in terms of speed. And if Eglinton was totally grade separated but still LRT, I wouldn't have a problem with that. Even if it was totally grade separated west of Don Mills, I'd be (reasonably) happy even though it'd be LRT.
Long term, capacity issues might point towards subway. In fact, I think that they should be looking at how many riders Eglinton'll divert of the B-D and how many new riders it could attract, cause it has the capacity to divert a good 75% of the B-D's bus traffic, and could get similar walk in ridership to the B-D due to all the high density traffic. But let's not argue about capacity; it's all about speed right now.
So we're in agreement that LRT and subway, if both are grade separated, have almost identical speeds. I said before, if Eglinton called for total grade separation, I'd take it. But it doesn't, and it in no way recognizes prime grade separation opportunity a whole 7 km along the Richview corridor and the speed advantages it could bring.
So assuming that capacity wasn't a concern and assuming that they actually grade separated the entire line, here's my question: why do it LRT? If the separation is the same, and the stations are the same, why don't they just build subway so worry about future capacity issues can be laid to rest? Just like on Sheppard, they could use smaller trains and build knock out walls in the stations so it can easily be expanded for future higher capacities.
EDIT: As for your second post, do you even understand what I'm talking about? I'm saying that the LRT is already being build to subway standards underground between Keele and Laird, so a Jane-Don Mills subway would only be an extra 3 km of true subway that needs to be built. When you consider that you wouldn't have to build the rest of the surface LRT past Jane and Don Mills, the Jane-Don Mills subway would get built faster than the LRT.
Who wants to grade separate the entire line? There will never be a case for extending an Eglinton subway through Scarborough, at least not in any of our life times. You're building in a permanent transfer and bottleneck for no good reason.So assuming that capacity wasn't a concern and assuming that they actually grade separated the entire line, here's my question: why do it LRT? If the separation is the same, and the stations are the same, why don't they just build subway so worry about future capacity issues can be laid to rest?
EDIT: As for your second post, do you even understand what I'm talking about? I'm saying that the LRT is already being build to subway standards underground between Keele and Laird, so a Jane-Don Mills subway would only be an extra 3 km of true subway that needs to be built. When you consider that you wouldn't have to build the rest of the surface LRT past Jane and Don Mills, the Jane-Don Mills subway would get built faster than the LRT.
Subway could be built faster than the LRT
On Eglinton we have the opportunity to build things right. Building a subway from Leaside to Weston Road would force people to transfer to a bus to get the airport or transfer to a bus to get to Don Mills. By building LRT, since the capacity can handle the expected ridership, people can transfer onto the Eglinton Line and not need to transfer again to get to the airport. They get all the benefits that a subway would provide on the grade separated portion and then continue in their own lanes to the airport.
If they have no problem imposing two transfers on Sheppard from end to end, what makes Eglinton so different or special that transfers must be avoided at all costs? I'd be less opposed to LRT if they were genuinely building the thing as convertible to subway down the road.
Stop saying this. It undermines your argument. Unless you can come up with an in-depth study by experts that analyzes the route, your "$4 billion" is just a fantasy number.
Also remember, we live in the same country as Montreal/STM, whom is capable ...
Why do you think STM is capable of building 20 km of new subway? STM hasn't built any subway since the 1980s; the provincial government handed over metro construction to AMT years ago. Secondly, there's little indication that they are going to construct much ... it's all political talk and more studies. Thirdly, the combination of narrower trains and tunnels, and favourable geology results in being able to put both tracks in a single tunnel which is considerably cheaper. Fourthly, they blew the cost estimate on the Laval subway so badly that there was a provincial enquiry into the cost overuns.Also remember, we live in the same country as Montreal/STM, whom is capable of building 20 kms of new subway by 2020 for $4 billion itself.
Also remember, we live in the same country as Montreal/STM, whom is capable of building 20 kms of new subway by 2020 for $4 billion itself. So either the TTC is hyperinflating the costs or throwing in a bunch of miscellaneous things such as the purchase of new vehciles, building new storage yards, dual tunnel-bores mandate, tunneling vs. bridging over riverbeds & highways, etc. when making their assessments.